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GMP-140: a receptor for neutrophils and monocytes on activated platelets and endothelium.
Authors:R P McEver
Affiliation:Department of Medicine, St. Francis Medical Research Institute, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City.
Abstract:GMP-140 is a membrane glycoprotein located in secretory granules of platelets and endothelium. When these cells are activated by agonists such as thrombin, GMP-140 is rapidly translocated to the plasma membrane. GMP-140, along with ELAM-1 and the peripheral lymph node homing receptor, defines the selectin family of structurally related molecules that regulate interactions of leukocytes with the blood vessel wall. Each of these molecules contains an N-terminal lectin-like domain, followed by an EGF-like region, a series of consensus repeats related to those in complement-binding proteins, a transmembrane domain, and a short cytoplasmic tail. The genomic structures of the selectins suggest that they arose by duplication and modification of exons encoding specific structural domains. GMP-140 is a receptor for neutrophils and monocytes when it is expressed on activated platelets and endothelium. This property facilitates rapid adhesion of leukocytes to endothelium at regions of tissue injury as well as platelet-leukocyte interactions at sites of inflammation and hemorrhage. Like other leukocyte adhesion molecules, GMP-140 may also participate in pathologic inflammation, thrombosis, and tumor metastasis. Confirmation of such pathologic roles may lead to design of new drugs that block adhesive receptor function in human disease.
Keywords:selectins  inflammation  hemostasis  leukocytes  cell-cell interactions
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